Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Weekends at Bellevue

Weekends at Bellevue Weekends at Bellevue by Julie Holland


My rating: 3 of 5 stars
It's not entirely clear to me why Dr. Holland chose to tell her story, or, at least, to tell it as she did.  In a recent NPR interview she sounded a great deal more sensible and grounded than she sounds in Weekends at Bellevue where she comes across as the petulant, aggressive, badly-behaved doctor we all hope never to see.  Although she tried to illustrate her evolution from an immature, whiny, insecure resident to a caring, respected healer, she apparently never entirely overcame her aggressive tendencies.  Perhaps that makes this more honest than many memoirs, but it also leaves me wondering why she thought her story was worth telling. The book might have been more balanced had it included at least a few stories about the more ordinary patients that came through her ER, rather than focusing to exclusion on the most extreme cases.  It is clear that she is far more interested in extreme pathologies than in all of the people with more mundane, but just as painful to them, problems.  Reading this would certainly dissuade me from seeking Dr. Holland out for treatment in her private practice.  

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Thursday, October 1, 2009

The Last Chinese Chef

The Last Chinese Chef The Last Chinese Chef by Nicole Mones


My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I wish I'd read this book before I moved to China, not after I got back! Although the story was no better than ordinary, the wealth of detail about food, what's important about it, what makes it great, how it is perceived in the culture, etc. is fantastic. I was never really able to articulate what distinguished the great food we had in China from the not-so-great. This book did it for me. Now I wish I could go back with a more mindful awareness of what to look for in a dish and eat my way around the country.

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